IntroductionAs impressed as I was with A&Kâ€™s SAW series, I knew that I needed to check out their AR series. Their SR-25 lineup has been thoroughly reviewed on several sites, but I hadnâ€™t seen too many reviews of their LR300 models, which is why weâ€™re here today! Needless to say, I was very impressed with this latest offering from A&K.

Real Steel History:The LR 300 is an assault rifle based on the M4 Carbine, designed and manufactured by Z-M Weapons. One stated feature of the rifle is its 'diverted felt recoil' which helps prevent muzzle rise common to most other select-fire rifles and carbines. Also notable is the rifle's capability to use a fully folding skeletal stock. Most AR-15/M16 rifle variants have a thick, cylindrical recoil buffer tube that protrudes several inches straight back from the rear of the receiver, and the weapon cannot operate without it. This normally precludes the use of anything but fixed or telescoping stocks. The LR 300 gets around this problem in two ways - the bolt carrier is half the length of a standard AR-15 carrier. Secondly, the return spring for the bolt carrier is mounted forward of the receiver on the extended carrier key. LR-300MLs have flat top receivers with Weaver rails, allowing them to be used with multiple types of sights. The trigger, as well as the charging handle, magazine button, and hold open device, etc., are the same as the M16 and AR-15 rifles. The barrel has a 1:9 twist ratio, is chrome lined and has a Phantom flash mock mock mock mock mock mock suppressor.

Info and pic courtesy of Wikipedia.com and World.Guns.ru

Ordering:I was provided this gun by Airsplat, so that you guys would have something to read on those boring Wednesday nights. I ordered it on Tuesday morning, and it arrived at my doorstep on Friday evening, as is my normal time frame with Airsplat. It is currently priced at $180.00, with free shipping, and with either a short or long barrel at Airsplat.com.

Basic Gun InformationThis AEG is a replica of the ZM Weapons LR300, specifically their early models, manufactured about 2000-2001. It is a clone of the G&G GR300. Before if you wanted an LR300, you needed to get the G&G or the Prime conversion kit, both of which are quite pricy. This is a much less expensive option, and a great starting point for a weapon buildup.

First impressions/Packaging:As my A&K M249 arrived in a plain, unmarked brown box, I wasnâ€™t surprised to see that this came in the same thing. At least A&K doesnâ€™t jack up their prices to cover their box art charges! Inside this box was a foam lower that housed the gun and all the included accessories.

From here on, click all pictures to enlarge

Box

â€œPut your junk in that box!â€

Included:A&K didnâ€™t skimp on the accessories with this one. Included with the gun are one extended metal hi-cap magazine, metal orange spare flashhider, 9.6v 1200 mAh mini battery, charger, phillipâ€™s head screwdriver, front sight adjustment tool, stock wrench, two QD sling swivels, and a bag of shady looking BBs. Youâ€™ll notice that I didnâ€™t mention a manual. Thatâ€™s because there wasnâ€™t one! Itâ€™s a gun designed for men who wouldnâ€™t read it anywaysâ€¦

Family photo

Tools

Swivelly slingy rapidly detached goodness

Gun Specifications:Weight: About 6.5 lbsLength: 27.5â€-36.25â€ (folded or unfolded)Width: 2.5â€-3.3â€ (again, unfolded or folded)Height: 9â€Sight Radius: 10.5â€œ-14.5â€ (if you remount the rear sight further back on the receiver)LOP: 14.25â€

Externals:Metal metal everywhere, but not aâ€¦ dropâ€¦ toâ€¦ drink? Okay, all 18th century poetry references aside, this thing has a ton of metal. The only non-metal parts are the pistol grip, handguard, little plastic piece in the stock, and the butt pad.

The stock is what makes this gun what it is, in the real world at least. Now, before everyone cries foul, with â€œthatâ€™s not the right stock! The right one is this one,â€ the stock included with this one is an actual LR300 stock, just not the one that everyone associates with the gun. The included one is a side folder, and is not adjustable for length like the aforementioned ML stock. It is made of metal, with the butt pad being hard plastic, as well as the little piece in the middle. It folds to the left by lifting up at the hinge to clear the locking lug, and swinging it around until it locks in the folded position. Doing it the other way will extend it again. Itâ€™s secured to the body by a screw as well as large threads (this is where that stock wrench comes in handy.) To remove it, you really just need to unscrew the allen head screw from the middle, and pull the stock right off.

Stock

Folded

Folding mechanism

More secure than Fort Knox

Ribbed for herâ€¦ security?

The receiver is not a standard M4 receiver. The upper is the special LR300 receiver, but the differences are primarily cosmetic. One thing to note, the charging handle does pull back, but doesnâ€™t open the dust cover. You must pull it down using your hand, and hold it there, as it springs back closed, opposite of what a normal one does. The lower receiver is all standard M4 however, and should feel right at home with anyone whoâ€™s handled one. The paint is a nice matte black, and is very evenly applied with no runs or uneven spots.

Receiver overview

Pulling down the dust cover

The switchgear is all metal, and is easily operated, in true M4 fashion. The fire modes are laser engraved on both sides, although the right side is non functional. The mag release is standard stuff, holding and releasing mags at your command. The mock bolt catch is serves no function, aside from scratching the upper receiver when disassembling the gun.

Selector

Trigger

The grip is another â€œZMâ€ thing, and, although it looks funkier than George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, it actually fits the hand very well, and is comfortable for southpaws or us â€œnormalâ€ folk. It is heavily ribbed for solid gripping in all conditions. It appears to be made of some kind of nylon polymer, very much like Dboys M4 grips. The motor base is massive, vented, and flat head tool adjustable. No tiny motor disk to lose with this gun!

Grip

Ribbing

Make my funk the G-Funk

Gigantor motor base

Moving forwards, we arrive at the cylindrical handguard, which serves two functions. First and foremost, it give you a place to put your hand! Secondly, it houses the battery, which is much less sexy, but equally important. It is also quite poky (in a good way) too keep your hand on the dang thing. It isnâ€™t really secured to the gun in any way other than somewhat clipping onto the large metal disks at the back of the gas block and the front of the receiver, but it wonâ€™t just fall off. It does have some rotational wobble, but you can help that by attaching a sling mount in one of the side holes. There are several holes in the bottom which are threaded to take the sling mounts as well, but they can be used to mount rails if you so desire. There are two little notches on the top of the handguard which need to go towards the receiver when installing, otherwise the handguard will bow out a little at the rear and cause it to wobble a touch more than normal.

Foregrip

Gotta keep it ventilated! Note, the handguard was installed backwards in this pic. Those little notches at the top should be on the receiver side.

Threaded for fun!

You need to somewhat pry the front apart, then slide it forwards to get to the battery. Itâ€™s kind of a pain in the butt, but has to be done unfortunately. Once the battery is installed, you slide it back, ensuring it locks into position.

Slide it forwards

Stick the battery in

The sling mounts can be mounted in a variety of places. There are literally 10 different spots on the gun that are threaded to accept them, with 9 being on the handguard, and one being on the right side of the stock folding mechanism. They are a QD type, where you can keep the base mounted and attach or remove the actual sling mount with ease.

One on the stock hinge

And one on the handguard

The front sight/gas block is a fairly solid chunk of metal, and it clamps to the barrel using 8(!) allen head screws. Mine could be rotated a degree or so, but it took a good bit of strength to do so.

Gas block

Lotsâ€™oâ€™screws

The outer barrel is one big long piece, and has absolutely zero wobble. It is terminated in 14mm-(CCW) threads, with an orange plastic flashhider attached. I removed it (with help from a dremel as it was glued on quite securely), and replaced it with the metal Phantom flashhider that came with the gun.

Phantom flashhider

Threads

The sights are metal and removable if you feel so inclined to do so. The front is mounted on a dovetail mount in the gas block, and is adjustable for elevation with the included tool. The rear is RIS mounted, in a somewhat odd location. I have no idea why ZM Weapons decided that was the right place to put it, but it certainly works. I think itâ€™s due to the ease of rapid acquisition of targets with it being that far forwards, but I could be wrong. Either way, you can move it back if you want. The rear is adjustable for windage and elevation using no tools. Itâ€™s a flattop receiver and you can mount whatever optics you want as well, provided theyâ€˜ll mount to the 20mm top rail.

Front sight

Rear sight

Sight picture

Overall, I think that the LR300 is an odd looking, but oddly comfortable weapon to use. There are a few negative aspects to the externals, namely with the loose front handguard, but it can be solved by putting some screws in the side holes, at the expense of a more tedious battery install.

Trademarks:There are no markings on the gun at all, aside from the laser engraved selector switch markings.

Magazines:The included magazine is a G&G extended type, made of metal, and holding 400ish rounds. It fits and feeds very well, with about 2mm of front and back freeplay, and 3mm side to side. I tested it with JG, SRC, MAG, Dboys, Echo1, UTG, ICS, and TM mags and didnâ€™t find one that didnâ€™t work.

Monolithic magazine

Feeding bits

Performance:Baseline performance after a 500 round break in period is as follows:

ROF was about 10 RPS using the stock battery. It went up to 13 RPS with my Echo 1 10.8v battery box, so a better battery would certainly help. One thing to remember is that this is a high powered gun, with a high torque motor, and is not built for high ROF.

Range was pretty straightforward. The combination of 430 FPS a somewhat short inner barrel led to my personal ability to hit a man sized target 155' away about 90% of the time, using TSD .25g BBs. I would not advise using .20g BBs in this gun, strictly because the FPS is too high. It won't damage the gun, but your shots will go everywhere. Everywhere, that is, except for your point of aim...

Internals:Luckily, anyone who has worked on an M4 will feel very much at home with this gun. Disassembly is straightforwards, and the upper receiver is of a tabless design. One thing to note on the disassembly is that you WILL cause scratches on the side of the upper receiver due to the mock bolt catch. It hasn't scratched down to the metal yet on mine, but after 4 takedowns, it's starting to get through the paint.

Inside you'll find a reinforced V2 gearbox, which is wired to the front, obviously. The wiring used is very flexible and seems to flow the current pretty well. The motor is a very high torque type, which is most likely needed for the M130ish spring. You will also find metal bushings, which appear to be 6mm, a metal ball bearing spring guide, nylon piston and ported head, type 0 cylinder, and a shell that actually has some reinforcement at the front, where it's needed. The gears are A&K stamped, and seem to be cast well enough. The gearbox was actually lubed lightly, but in the right places, and the shimming wasn't horrible.

Gearbox

Metal bushings

Slight gearbox reinforcement

Guts...

Shell

Spring guide

Piston

Air nozzle

The inner barrel is approximately 345mm long, which is about 3" or so short of the muzzle. The hop-up is metal and is a one piece design. It gets the job done, but a longer barrel would be a nice addition.

Barrel and hop-up

Hop-up

Modifications: Being that this has an M4 V2 gearbox shoved inside, the skyâ€™s the limit. There are no rails on the front handguard, but you can certainly mount some, even without drilling any holes. I used to SPR rails end to end on the bottom, and mounted an M203. Now thatâ€™s style!

I also installed an STS from Tactical Airsoft Supply to help prevent gearbox shell failure due to the hot spring. This required some cutting to the lower receiver, but was a fairly easy task. For battery use, I mounted a rail on the side, expanded a hole in the handguard, and used my Echo 1 10.8v battery box, which gave me very nice firing results.

Cons:Goofy handguard attachmentLimited to small batteries in the handguardHandguard is a PITA to remove and installHigh FPS (too hot for a lot of fields)Finish on some parts could be better (namely the stock hinge)

Overall:Well, if you want an LR300 and donâ€™t want to blow about $400, then the A&K is a no brainer. Itâ€™s a great starting point to build your perfect LR300. Iâ€™m very pleased to see A&K stepping up their game, and hope there are more models like this in the future!

Booligan, your remarks took all the seriousness out of the review. I like the humor.

I completely agree.

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The Name-this-song game is back! Here we go! PM me the answer."The fire burning in her eyes, the chaos that controlled my mind."Previous answer was 'I'm Yours' by Jason Mraz, answered by TheCosmicPope.

Great review so far Bool. Couple questions on it though. One being, can a nunchuk battery fit inside there, any approximate maximum sizes? Also, can you use an aftermarket lower receiver, but keep the stock upper as you said it was slightly different.

On ASGI, someone posted up a comment/review thing. They mentioned the inner barrel does not go the full length of the outer barrel, can you confirm/deny this? Also, do you already know what the inner barrel length is? I realize you haven't hit up the internals yet, but just wondering.

I would also like to point out that the rear sight ir probably up front, and not at the back for the purpose of the side folding stock. if you have the stock folded to the side, having the rear sight at the back end of the gun will be unformtable to use. Having the sight up forward gives you tha chance to really take advantage of the sorter length.

I went airsofting on the 15th (in england), had a brilliant day. Perfect you might say, apart from one thing. The distinct lack of an A&K lr300.I intend to buy myself one soon enough, before i do though theres some things i'd like to know, or at least have clarified.1. Ive heard that the gears arent made to the highest of tolerances and so can be a bit gravelly and rough, swapping them out pretty much immediately has been suggested, is this the case?2. I'm fairly short (5'6) with a larg-ish chest and tend to prefer a stock i can adjust for length because i effectively have incredibly short arms, i wont take your word as gospel because its obviously hard to guesstimate, but from your own dimensions would you say id be ok using the stock unfolded without too much trouble.

The main reason i ask these questions is because im fairly new to airsofting and so i dont have the experience to easily order the right parts/upgrades i might need without spending hours trawling the internet making sure they're going to be compatible.Im sure ill think of other things i dont know and want to, so check back for more of my lack of knowledge. Thanks

Uh-oh, bool. Says your bandwith is exceeded for the photos. Is this just me or is everyone else seeing this as well?

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The Name-this-song game is back! Here we go! PM me the answer."The fire burning in her eyes, the chaos that controlled my mind."Previous answer was 'I'm Yours' by Jason Mraz, answered by TheCosmicPope.

Demelitia, I WILL be doing a full internal review on this one, so I'll let you know my internal findings. And yes, you can use it with the stock folded just fine. Is it the most accurate way to do it? No, but it'll do.

And yes guys, my bandwidth was exceeded this month. All the pics will be back up on the 20th, unless someone wants to pay for me to have a Photobucket pro account

I burn through an average of 40GB or so every month between my 2 photobucket review accounts. You guys just look at my pics too much...

You mentioned that mini-batts will fit in the handguard, but will nun-chucks?

How is the stock to fold? Is it easy to fold or difficult? Is there any wobble when folded? I've heard that, for example, the FNC folding stock needs to be heavily lubed to function and was hoping that this wasn't the case with the LR-300.

How is the stock to fold? Is it easy to fold or difficult? Is there any wobble when folded? I've heard that, for example, the FNC folding stock needs to be heavily lubed to function and was hoping that this wasn't the case with the LR-300.

It's rock solid folded or extended. It's not too hard to fold, you just have to lift it a bit to clear the locking lugs, then swing it. I can't see it needing any lubricant to keep it running smoothly.

I have the short barreled LR300 and the actual inner barrel length on mine is 11.220". Its been said that the inner barrel length is the same on both long or short barreled versions. Also the barrel I.D. on mine checks in at .2395".

If you are leaving feedback....This forum is not for discussion of a review. You may post feedback and/or suggestions regarding grammar, spelling, pictures, or the amount of content. Disagreements with the reviewers opinion do not belong here. If you feel that strongly that he is in error, send him a Private Message. It is up to the author if he wants to change it. If the review gets published, there will be a linked Review Discussion thread at which time you can voice your concerns in a polite manner. Flaming/insulting the author either in this thread or the Post Publication Discussion thread will result in actions against your account.

- RLB

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"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."Edmund Burke

Bool, I just received the short version of this and I tried out my largest nun-chuk battery, 9.6v 2700mah; it fits fine in there without much struggle at all. I just rotated the fuse and both parts of the battery fit fine. Mine also was given a black metal flash hider in addition to the installed plastic orange tip.

RLB, as what I posted is about the same gun, with first hand experience that could possibly be helpful to Booligan I deemed it ok for a post here instead of a PM, correct me if I am wrong.

Okay, now I'm starting to get irritated. Read the friggin posts before yours before you post people! Reading comprehension is taught thoroughly by the time you turn 13, and since everyone here is at least that age, you should be able to read with no problems.

So I can make this abundantly clear:

MY PHOTOBUCKET BANDWIDTH WAS EXCEEDED. THE PICTURES WILL BE BACK ONLINE ON THE 20TH OF MARCH. I KNOW. STOP TELLING ME ABOUT IT.